It is not what one says, but rather what one does...

The stakes are high. While many persist in comparing the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to a schoolyard brawl,
Israelis and Palestinians are struggling with matters of life and death. The question of the possibility of
peace holds existential ramifications.

The broad strokes of a negotiated settlement between Israel and the Palestinians
have been well known for decades - two states, Israel and Palestine, side by side, broadly based on
the pre-1967 lines with agreed-upon land swaps. Israel's security needs will be addressed and anchored in a
treaty and safeguarded by a powerful IDF.

President Obama reaffirmed this sensible vision in March when he addressed the Israeli public and the world in
Jerusalem. And with his backing, Secretary of State John Kerry has willed the parties back to the negotiating
table.

This is a stunningly delicate process. Unforeseen events in the region, unilateral actions by either party or
even just a failure of political will and imagination can lead to a breakdown in talks at any moment.

This is where Americans for Peace Now and Shalom Achshav in Israel come in.

Shalom Achshav was founded in 1978 to mobilize public support for Israel's peace treaty with Egypt. Since then,
it has played a key role in spurring the Israeli public and its leaders towards further peace treaties.

Shalom Achshav is widely known for its Settlement Watch program, the premier civilian source of impartial
information about the expansion of Israel's settlements in the territories, which serve now as a physical and
political barrier to a two-state solution. Settlement Watch carefully monitors the growth of the settlements,
tracking information that would otherwise be extremely difficult to maintain.

Shalom Achshav's legal advocacy challenging settlements in Israeli courts gets results. Since 2005, when Shalom
Achshav began petitioning against illegal outposts, no new outpost has been established in the West Bank and
the number of houses built on private Palestinian lands has fallen dramatically.

In the United States, Americans for Peace Now (APN) provides nearly half of the funding for Israel's Peace Now
and helps make possible the actions, research and legal advocacy that assists peace-seeking Israelis in taking
back the middle ground.

Every week brings a healthy dose of bad news from the region -from the stubborn growth of Jewish settlements to
distorted history in Hamas textbooks, from Jewish "Price Tag" attacks on Palestinians to public celebration of
Palestinians who committed acts of terror against Jews. Those looking for despair can easily amass supportive
evidence.

But instead of apathy and resignation, many of us have chosen action and hope.
That's why I support Peace Now, which since its inception has been pushing for peace with a balanced
approach, reminding the Israeli public that the status quo -the continued occupation of the West Bank-
threatens the very existence of the Jewish state.

Americans for Peace Now is not Pollyannaish; their brand of hope is based on a rational and constructive view
of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Thousands of people turn to APN's website, www.peacenow.org, for information, analyses and the opportunity to learn more.
Joining APN on Facebook and Twitter are further ways to be connected.

Follow APN's calls to action online. Talk to your friends about the middle ground that Peace Now is trying to
reclaim. See how settlements have proven disastrous for Israel. Read why a two-state solution will preserve
Israel's Jewish and democratic character.

Israelis and Palestinians deserve to live normal, dignified lives that are not
governed by conflict, violence, humiliation and de-humanization. They deserve leaders who leave no
stone unturned in pursuit of peace, and supportive world leaders who will make sure that they keep their
eyes on the prize: a PEACEFUL resolution to this conflict.

P.S. As I am drafting this letter, Shalom Achshav (Peace Now in Israel) achieved another
important victory, with the Israeli High Court ruling emphatically in favor of its case to evacuate
several illegal outposts in the West Bank. It is written in Pirkei Avot (1:17) "It is not what one says, but
rather what one does, that makes all the difference in the world." Shalom Achshav and APN are making a
difference. You can too. Let's not just wish peace; Let's help do it.

RABBI SHARON BROUS In 2013, Rabbi Sharon Brous was recognized as the
most-influential Rabbi in the United States by Newsweek and the Daily Beast, and as one of the Forward's
50 most-influential American Jews. In 2013 Brous blessed the President and Vice-President at the
Inaugural National Prayer Service. She sits on the faculty of the Hartman Institute-North America, Wexner
Heritage and REBOOT. She serves on the board of T'ruah -The Rabbinic Call to Human Rights, is a rabbinic
advisor to American Jewish World Service and Bend the Arc. She received the Lives of Commitment Award
from Auburn Theological Seminary, was a JWI Woman to Watch and was the inaugural recipient of the
Inspired Leadership Award from the Jewish Community Foundation of Los Angeles. In 2004 Brous, Melissa
Balaban and a handful of young, entrepreneurial Jews realizing they shared a passion for meaningful and
intentional Jewish engagement, social justice and really good fair-trade chocolate, set out to create
IKAR - now one of the fastest growing Jewish communities in the country.